Dear brother Dzheremi,
Yes, though Catholic#2 should not be under any illusion that a resolution will necessarily follow the talk. Certainly people of all faiths and creeds have listened to one another and still come away resolute in their positions regarding the truth of their own faith and, naturally, the untruth of the other.
I understand that mentality perfectly. I use to have it. I realize that it is all in God’s time and by God’s grace (I’m not saying this on a one-sided note, I am speaking of understanding between the Churches in general). For me, I had argued with Catholics in the past when I was not yet Catholic. Their arguments did not really hit home to me, though now I understand and accept them. As I detailed in the thread “My Witness,” my journey started due to a self-initiated investigation into the headship of Sts. Peter and Paul in the early Church. In hindsight, I think I could not accept the arguments from Catholics because I felt that - regardless of the logic - their arguments was in a sense a sort of imposition that I did not welcome. I had to make an investigation on my
own initiative in order to fully understand and accept (eventually) what Catholics had been explaining to me all along.
Yes, me too. And more so than any declaration, I want actions that show that Rome has repudiated these views. Pretty words are not enough.
On the issue of Latinization, priests from the UGCC and the Syro-Malankara (or Syro-Malabar, I can never remember which one) appealed to the Pope to permit them their Latinizations, in opposition to the decisions of their respective Synods. The Pope ignored their appeals for quite a long time, and eventually just rubber stamped the decision of the Synods. I think his long silence was a tacit admission that, “folks, you need to heed your own head bishop and synod, for they have the ordinary and proper authority to treat of this matter, not me.” Quite uniquely, the Latin Catholics in the Ethiopian Catholic Church are under the omophor of the Ethiopian hierarchy. That’s the way it should be, and that reality should spread throughout the Traditional territories of the Eastern and Oriental Catholic Churches. I can’t think of the specifics right now, but the Pope has at least on one occasion (possibly 3) in the past few years overturned decisions of the Curia contrary to the interests of the Eastern Catholic Churches (really, not a new thing, since the Pope has been siding with the Eastern and Oriental Catholic Churches against the Curia since the latter 19th century). There are probably other examples I can’t think of right now.
I would want to see the context from which you have taken the Pope’s words. I do not doubt that there are such misunderstandings of Catholic doctrine among both the OO and the EO. In fact, on a CO board I sometimes read, the topic of Marian devotion within Catholicism has come up under the title of “Do you think Catholics worship Mary?”. There are some who say no (these ones generally mention that they were educated in Catholic schools as children), some who say yes (even arguing that “Co-redemptrix” is an official title of Mary within the RCC! Yikes!), and various others who say “yes, but…” or “no, but…” It’s quite a mess, really! And really I don’t blame them. Even when I was obedient to Rome, I must admit I saw many things in this particular area that made me personally uncomfortable. Maybe with greater frequency than they occur in Catholicism overall due to the fact that I attended many Latino masses (Latinos, as you may know, generally have especially strong devotion to Our Lady which sometimes reaches quite frankly unsettling levels), but luckily I do recognize that such things are a minority overall. I can see why OO or EO might not be able to tell the difference, though.
But I would ask. Why are such distinctions so unacceptable, while distinctions within the Orthodox communions not so? Could it simply be a case of “the grass is greener on the other side?” For example, I’ve met EO who became Catholics because of frustrations with the messy jurisdictionalism within EO’xy. So it seems all is not perfect with EO’xy. I’ve been to more than one EO parish where there are pews, where groups come to pray at an icon in the middle of Liturgy, then leave, where the homily wasn’t very edifying, etc. Should I generalize this and say, “why does the EO
Church allow such abberations?” The Coptic Orthodox Church has changed its Liturgy a few times in the past and currently don’t accept the validity of Catholic baptism, though the other OO Churches do; the Armenians use unleavened bread that some CO view as heretical, use a slightly different Creed, and lament the loss of regular private confession in that Church; the Syriac Orthodox give doctrinal importance to primacy, and have been branded (whether derogatorily or in jest) as “cross-worshippers.” How can the OO maintain communion in such circumstances?
Why should the Catholic Church be singled out as unacceptable for the differences that exist within her? But that’s really just a rhetorical question. You can’t help how you feel and you have your reasons. I’m just throwing things out there (and not in any detail) to help you balance your considerations.
Blessings,
Marduk